_ . SEPTEMBER " ;_.19.48l' on/zv/r at home - at work - at play g (are DANCE i. " Momi. _ new oo-or. rorsro WAR-EI-IOUS-l THURSDAY, ssrr. l6 Al Blanchard‘: Orchestra Lunches and Refreshments SIGNIFICANT PERIOD _ ANCIENT COUNTRY During the last 25 years more 115E GI-YARPIAI!» (iv Thornton W. MOONLIGHT HAPPINESS Many little people aay Night's the best part o! day. -Old Mother Nature. ‘Timmy the FIYlXlB Squirrel put his head out g1 the door-waxy oi an old home oi’ Drummer the wood- Decker in a dead limb high in a- tree in the Green Forest Jelly, round rad Mr. Sun had gone to bed behind the Purple Hills and Mistress Moon was just rising above the edze o! the world to take his place in the sky above the Green Forest and the Green Meadows and all the other places where talk o! high and low degree, bl: lolk and little 101k. lierce (elk and gentle folk spend their lives. Timmy yawned and stretched. It wasn't because it war bedtime and l,“ he; a history that goes advances in the field o! cancer “ck 1t least 1,409 y!!!‘ baton‘ ‘h, christian era. In all previous time. research have been made tharil rosin cnosswoao ACBDSS DOWN 19. Oil-carry- .l. A firearm l. Incarnation ing vellel f6. Religion o! o! Vishnu 20. Lift the Moslema 2. Sacred 21. Masculine 51, Tug picture pronoun 1; The flat (Russ. Ch.) 22. Fuss l (archaic) 3. Coin (fix) 25. River 13, Dim; 4. Ignited (Buses. around 5. Editor Turk.) V a castle (abbr ) 26. Decimd 1i. City 6 Silly unit (Kaine) 7 TRAI- 28. A tine Yesterday's Aaeyq l5. Girl's name gresaion muslin 31. To become 6. Man's name 8. Stories from 29. Final sullen 7. Female 9 mp1s: 31. Lganner 40. At one time ' shee . rm a Al. Winged 1!. Aflegt 10. Unqualified Walking insects m meme; 14. To uphold 34. Pitchers s3. Observe {ion ll. Wayfldo 35. Glisten M. Loiter g3 wrmg hotels 36. Employ! 46. Periorrl fluid hi. Mine 5‘? entrance H1. Heathen , iml Q Kind o! , thread u ‘ so. * ' a1. Fuel " '7 32.1! home ‘as. Lubricaui d. United States ol 1| -‘Amer'lea (abbn) 8t. Humor _ . A sprite .'!'he letttn. of the sun s4. Cover the » inside o! 5 (5. Older 40. A ball l7. island o! Hebrides p (POOL) (B. fl-sbapad h? moldings ‘i DAILY OIYHOQUUIE-lles-da Isow to weak ‘it!’ AXYDLIAAXI ILONGFELLOW One letter simply stands for another. In this example A is used tor the three L's. X for the two 0'1. etc. Single letters. RPM- trophes, the length and formation o! the weeds are all hints. Each ‘lay the code letters are diflerent. AQVPWIYIIIQINNQI- DC PBX VKXICIIH XICKTQYD f! THAI. “W BX AX!‘ UXIC." DC V1.1 WA UXSC-—XSWI. a Prussia-n omuqmm anon. wrro A8’! roo alar- ousur niarosnn. rou m! ma: rounsau- nut awar l-llitzcnrssannar. rgfij-ggunumnin w m; resume lacuna. u. Ispslm and llscle Eli! ly lllllferll llsclrids '-' ' mom. MAKE. TH'TE.AM.I u” "p eoatw runes. ~ ' fiMOREPOUNDS . p s he was sleepy. Mr him it was get- ting-up time and he was yawning sway the last of his sleepiness, There would be no more sleep for this dainty little Squirrel until the time of day when most boys and girls are wishing that mother would have breakfast just a little later so that they might roll over for another nap. ' Some one pushed him from be- low and he scrambled outside. It was Mrs. Timmy. She put her had out oi the doorway. “Moon- Jight!" she exclaimed in a squeaky Kl e Con tract Bridge Dy Josephine Ciilberleon a \. "GGCCTKTM TWO 0F A KIND The final bid made by North in today's deal, and the opening lead made by west, were on a par: bat/h If!‘ InIZCU-ihbll llorthdealer _ Botheldeavuhenbla ‘i. QAQ972 QKQJQSGI . 4-K ' - . axe! |-— some: s4 ) N Qss 2T2 WE tits £8753 L-L 64" gassa Q10864_ ‘§l05= ‘J92 mime’ aingi North Belt Seat Wes! so Pass g9 lg: 4N1‘ S) Double Pan 0Q Pan ‘Pan North's use of the Blaolnwood convention in this case was of questionable merit, because of his void in spades. It was certainly not to be expected that South would be able to show more than one ace, it that, and there wou always be the possibility that ‘was the spade ace, thus exposing the North-South hands to the loss o! the two other aces, even it there was no gap in teheart suit, The iour-notrurn bid, however, would not have one any harm i! North had given the proper con- sideration to South's dolsble of live spades. That double was the clear- est. and most emphatic sort o! warning possible that South had strength in the opponents‘ suit, where it would be valueless i1 North-South bought the contract. Thus, North certainly should have accepted the double o! five spa‘ and collected a. sure penalty (which would have been 800 points) rather than indulge in a wild gamble for a slam. All o! the foregoing may seem somewhat academic, however, in view oi’ the tact that South made the all-ml West, very lll-advisedly under the circumstances opened a spade, and dummym club king quickly disappeared on South's spade ace. The heart finesse and break in the hearts then wound up the matter very quickly. Considering the extremely sign- ificant bidding, particularly North's west should not have thought well oi a. spade opening! Perhaps the most logical maneuver was to lay down the diamond ace for a look at dummy; but even a club pad would have been tar largest)‘ ~ ‘I What he really d-ld w" °° 81"" ¢qwn on the air through the moonllzhf- voice. "It is 801118 l° be l “we” ni ht." En, l; e perfect nishl’ P111015. my dear." said Timmy. His V0108 was just as Squeaky 55 llers- ,, “All the night tolls will be Out- declared Mrs. ‘Timmy. "They would be anYWBY- Folks must eat, no matter whether the night be dark or lllhi" "M" ru ted Timmy. BS0." said Mrs. Timmy as li Tummy hadn't spoken "we must be exta careiul. Ii you like ml’ advice you won't pretend you are sliding down the mocnbeams- It isn't sale, and you know it. You remember what W“? Glwdfflh“ Timmy used to my" "He said a lot o! lihlllll. M055 old folks do." rewrted Jimmy a bit sharply. " ‘It is a wise Squirrel who it“?! lout o! the moonlight.’ That's winat he said. B0 was rllhl-r Ind you ktlflI W" Nuwkw MY‘ Timmy. "Moonlight is be-wlwnlnx. and l guess the old fellow found it so when he was yollllt — l! he W" was. Sometimes I wonder it old folk ever were young!’ declmd Timmy "He meant it isn't safe. You know that as well as I do." retort/ed Mrs. Timmy. Her voice squeaked more than "Bull- “But sliding down the moon- beams is such tun!" cried Timmy helm Ma's. Timmy could protest he tong em from the and of that dead limb. "whe-e-e!" he cried gnd_fl,w‘ly he went, sliding down l moonbeam across a lighted open- ing among the trees to land with l taint thump on the loot of a tree on the other side. Oi course he didn't really slide down a moonbeam. l-le just pre- tended that he did. and had Y°l1 seen him you might have thought that he really did. what he really did was to glide down on the air throlgh the moonlight. from where he had been sitting high in his home tree he had made a mighty leap, spreading himself 118$ by stretching his arms and legs sidewiae as tar as he could. This stretched the membrane, a sort of fur-covered piece or skin between the arm and hind leg on each side and he glided, or slid, on the air down to near the foot o! the tree on the opposite side oi’ the moon- light opening. Some talks think Tunnvy has real wings and flies This ls why he is called Flying Squirrel. It is a misnomer, a name wrongly used. He should be called Gliding Squirrel. No Squirrel can fl! Ill! more than can you or I. rt Just lsn‘t and can't be done. "Whe-e-e!‘ Here I ccmei" cried Mrs. Timmy, forgetting all about Grandfather Timmiy and his wise sayings. Away she went down the beams to near the toot or the some tree Timmy had landed on. He was now running up it to make another long glide. Don't you wish you could run straight up s. tree and slide down again on a moon- meam like those two happy gliders in the Green Forest? The next story: "rearsome Purl and Hulls." RETIRED RAILWAY MAN DIES SAINT JJI-IN. N.B.. Sept. l3 — (CPO-William S. Hammond. re- tired some years ago from Canad- ian ‘Pacific Railway, died sudden- ly at his hcme in west Saint John yesterday. l-le was 8'7. Seveml tim- es he had saved a liie in the wat- z-rs of Saint John harbor. The last BMW"!!! 1 "l! 10M IQ time, he plunged in alter a drown- selected. ing boy. l-le was then 73 years old. vX-UQ-Q-O-OQ-Oi §OO§ H O T I C E * .The Blacksmith Business of P. J. Sentnsr, ‘Ill Kent St. Charlottetown hes been token over by Mr. Louis O'Brien of ' Crapaud, P. E. I. ~ x ly Alex Raymond "tau. Mil. euux ‘i0 Qll/‘JLEQTIEIOWN . _ . i -~ - mus or rns ROYAL MOUNTED TWIYOIVLY/MV! ' 7K0 14F! 7b / , 5g‘! fl \ // v PAGE JfLHEQ Iv Zane G 7g rmigfiv%fl fro»! "1 "ry/grfiwsrm/ivoni/s 45's savwassoufmws aufinmr aesmuomucn/ro/z 450mm Q14. . K , .' - Il/M I Iv Hnm Fisllet Mlhnamut ' iaowwAiTAsecou0...wn.|., vuirsnlnurssseizatoox mrrakzncourlefezr " MARRlllL-JIIFALLQ Asissesrmkiusnce Anvresczmsus lusisoimur ‘IM --WHV, I DlDNT EVEN GET A LAUGH WHEN r PUT on THE asnvs HAT WITH ALI. 11-45 FANCY FEATHERS ON rr 1/ u wi-w, HORACE r THOUGHT i-r was A siicé P / i NW AU , ‘ , ,. A PITCH R ICE WA ER" m: \~\~\?§. w; THAT l5 waaez! I§MU6TN'T 8E » . eEEri on "me i; ' MAINLAND.’ ' l